Your browser doesn't support javascript.
Mostrar: 20 | 50 | 100
Resultados 1 - 20 de 85
Filtrar
2.
STAR Protoc ; 2(4): 100943, 2021 12 17.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-1510407

RESUMEN

During the COVID-19 pandemic, US states developed Crisis Standards of Care (CSC) algorithms to triage allocation of scarce resources to maximize population-wide benefit. While CSC algorithms were developed by ethical debate, this protocol guides their quantitative assessment. For CSC algorithms, this protocol addresses (1) adapting algorithms for empirical study, (2) quantifying predictive accuracy, and (3) simulating clinical decision-making. This protocol provides a framework for healthcare systems and governments to test the performance of CSC algorithms to ensure they meet their stated ethical goals. For complete details on the use and execution of this protocol, please refer to Jezmir et al. (2021).


Asunto(s)
COVID-19/terapia , Cuidados Críticos/normas , Asignación de Recursos para la Atención de Salud/normas , Guías de Práctica Clínica como Asunto/normas , Nivel de Atención/ética , Triaje/normas , COVID-19/virología , Cuidados Críticos/ética , Asignación de Recursos para la Atención de Salud/ética , Humanos , SARS-CoV-2/aislamiento & purificación , Triaje/ética , Triaje/métodos
3.
J Med Ethics ; 46(8): 495-498, 2020 08.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-1467727

RESUMEN

Key ethical challenges for healthcare workers arising from the COVID-19 pandemic are identified: isolation and social distancing, duty of care and fair access to treatment. The paper argues for a relational approach to ethics which includes solidarity, relational autonomy, duty, equity, trust and reciprocity as core values. The needs of the poor and socially disadvantaged are highlighted. Relational autonomy and solidarity are explored in relation to isolation and social distancing. Reciprocity is discussed with reference to healthcare workers' duty of care and its limits. Priority setting and access to treatment raise ethical issues of utility and equity. Difficult ethical dilemmas around triage, do not resuscitate decisions, and withholding and withdrawing treatment are discussed in the light of recently published guidelines. The paper concludes with the hope for a wider discussion of relational ethics and a glimpse of a future after the pandemic has subsided.


Asunto(s)
Toma de Decisiones/ética , Ética Clínica , Asignación de Recursos para la Atención de Salud/ética , Equidad en Salud/ética , Personal de Salud/ética , Pandemias/ética , Betacoronavirus , COVID-19 , Infecciones por Coronavirus/virología , Planificación en Desastres , Humanos , Obligaciones Morales , Neumonía Viral/virología , Pobreza , Guías de Práctica Clínica como Asunto , Relaciones Profesional-Paciente , Órdenes de Resucitación , SARS-CoV-2 , Valores Sociales , Triaje/ética , Poblaciones Vulnerables , Privación de Tratamiento/ética
4.
Chest ; 161(2): 504-513, 2022 02.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-1401308

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: Faced with possible shortages due to COVID-19, many states updated or rapidly developed crisis standards of care (CSCs) and other pandemic preparedness plans (PPPs) for rationing resources, particularly ventilators. RESEARCH QUESTION: How have US states incorporated the controversial standard of rationing by age and/or life-years into their pandemic preparedness plans? STUDY DESIGN AND METHODS: This was an investigator-initiated, textual analysis conducted from April to June 2020, querying online resources and in-state contacts to identify PPPs published by each of the 50 states and for Washington, DC. Analysis included the most recent versions of CSC documents and official state PPPs containing triage guidance as of June 2020. Plans were categorized as rationing by (A) short-term survival (≤ 1 year), (B) 1 to 5 expected life-years, (C) total life-years, (D) "fair innings," that is, specific age cutoffs, or (O) other. The primary measure was any use of age and/or life-years. Plans were further categorized on the basis of whether age/life-years was a primary consideration. RESULTS: Thirty-five states promulgated PPPs addressing the rationing of critical care resources. Seven states considered short-term prognosis, seven considered whether a patient had 1 to 5 expected life-years, 13 rationed by total life-years, and one used the fair innings principle. Seven states provided only general ethical considerations. Seventeen of the 21 plans considering age/life-years made it a primary consideration. Several plans borrowed heavily from a few common sources, although use of terminology was inconsistent. Many documents were modified in light of controversy. INTERPRETATION: Guidance with respect to rationing by age and/or life-years varied widely. More than one-half of PPPs, many following a few common models, included age/life-years as an explicit rationing criterion; the majority of these made it a primary consideration. Terminology was often vague, and many plans evolved in response to pushback. These findings have ethical implications for the care of older adults and other vulnerable populations during a pandemic.


Asunto(s)
COVID-19 , Defensa Civil/normas , Gestión de Recursos de Personal en Salud , Cuidados Críticos , Asignación de Recursos para la Atención de Salud/normas , Nivel de Atención/organización & administración , Triaje , Anciano , COVID-19/epidemiología , COVID-19/terapia , Gestión de Recursos de Personal en Salud/ética , Gestión de Recursos de Personal en Salud/métodos , Gestión de Recursos de Personal en Salud/organización & administración , Cuidados Críticos/ética , Cuidados Críticos/organización & administración , Cuidados Críticos/normas , Humanos , SARS-CoV-2 , Capacidad de Reacción/normas , Triaje/ética , Triaje/organización & administración , Triaje/normas , Estados Unidos/epidemiología , Poblaciones Vulnerables
5.
Hist Philos Life Sci ; 43(3): 91, 2021 Jul 13.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-1309115

RESUMEN

Ageism has unfortunately become a salient phenomenon during the COVID-19 pandemic. In particular, triage decisions based on age have been hotly discussed. In this article, I first defend that, although there are ethical reasons (founded on the principles of benefit and fairness) to consider the age of patients in triage dilemmas, using age as a categorical exclusion is an unjustifiable ageist practice. Then, I argue that ageism during the pandemic has been fueled by media narratives and unfair assumptions which have led to an ethically problematic group homogenization of the older population. Finally, I conclude that an intersectional perspective can shed light on further controversies on ageism and triage in the post-pandemic future.


Asunto(s)
Ageísmo/ética , COVID-19/terapia , Triaje/ética , Ageísmo/prevención & control , Ageísmo/psicología , Ageísmo/estadística & datos numéricos , Humanos , SARS-CoV-2/fisiología , Triaje/estadística & datos numéricos
6.
BMC Fam Pract ; 22(1): 146, 2021 07 03.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-1295439

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: Early in the COVID-19 pandemic, general practices were asked to expand triage and to reduce unnecessary face-to-face contact by prioritizing other consultation modes, e.g., online messaging, video, or telephone. The current study explores the potential barriers and facilitators general practitioners experienced to expanding triage systems and their attitudes towards triage during the COVID-19 pandemic. METHOD: A mixed-method study design was used in which a quantitative online survey was conducted along with qualitative interviews to gain a more nuanced appreciation for practitioners' experiences in the United Kingdom. The survey items were informed by the Theoretical Domains Framework so they would capture 14 behavioral factors that may influence whether practitioners use triage systems. Items were responded to using seven-point Likert scales. A median score was calculated for each item. The responses of participants identifying as part-owners and non-owners (i.e., "partner" vs. "non-partner" practitioners) were compared. The semi-structured interviews were conducted remotely and examined using Braun and Clark's thematic analysis. RESULTS: The survey was completed by 204 participants (66% Female). Most participants (83%) reported triaging patients. The items with the highest median scores captured the 'Knowledge,' 'Skills,' 'Social/Professional role and identity,' and 'Beliefs about capabilities' domains. The items with the lowest median scores captured the 'Beliefs about consequences,' 'Goals,' and 'Emotions' domains. For 14 of the 17 items, partner scores were higher than non-partner scores. All the qualitative interview participants relied on a phone triage system. Six broad themes were discovered: patient accessibility, confusions around what triage is, uncertainty and risk, relationships between service providers, job satisfaction, and the potential for total digital triage. Suggestions arose to optimize triage, such as ensuring there is sufficient time to conduct triage accurately and providing practical training to use triage efficiently. CONCLUSIONS: Many general practitioners are engaging with expanded triage systems, though more support is needed to achieve total triage across practices. Non-partner practitioners likely require more support to use the triage systems that practices take up. Additionally, practical support should be made available to help all practitioners manage the new risks and uncertainties they are likely to experience during non-face-to-face consultations.


Asunto(s)
COVID-19 , Medicina General , Médicos Generales , Consulta Remota , Triaje , Actitud del Personal de Salud , COVID-19/epidemiología , COVID-19/prevención & control , COVID-19/terapia , Competencia Clínica , Inglaterra/epidemiología , Femenino , Medicina General/organización & administración , Medicina General/normas , Medicina General/tendencias , Médicos Generales/psicología , Médicos Generales/normas , Conocimientos, Actitudes y Práctica en Salud , Humanos , Control de Infecciones/métodos , Control de Infecciones/normas , Masculino , Pautas de la Práctica en Medicina/ética , Pautas de la Práctica en Medicina/tendencias , Consulta Remota/ética , Consulta Remota/métodos , Gestión de Riesgos/tendencias , SARS-CoV-2 , Triaje/ética , Triaje/métodos , Triaje/organización & administración , Triaje/normas
7.
Br Med Bull ; 138(1): 5-15, 2021 06 10.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-1246698

RESUMEN

INTRODUCTION: The coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic has placed intensive care units (ICU) triage at the center of bioethical discussions. National and international triage guidelines emerged from professional and governmental bodies and have led to controversial discussions about which criteria-e.g. medical prognosis, age, life-expectancy or quality of life-are ethically acceptable. The paper presents the main points of agreement and disagreement in triage protocols and reviews the ethical debate surrounding them. SOURCES OF DATA: Published articles, news articles, book chapters, ICU triage guidelines set out by professional societies and health authorities. AREAS OF AGREEMENT: Points of agreement in the guidelines that are widely supported by ethical arguments are (i) to avoid using a first come, first served policy or quality-adjusted life-years and (ii) to rely on medical prognosis, maximizing lives saved, justice as fairness and non-discrimination. AREAS OF CONTROVERSY: Points of disagreement in existing guidelines and the ethics literature more broadly regard the use of exclusion criteria, the role of life expectancy, the prioritization of healthcare workers and the reassessment of triage decisions. GROWING POINTS: Improve outcome predictions, possibly aided by Artificial intelligence (AI); develop participatory approaches to drafting, assessing and revising triaging protocols; learn from experiences with implementation of guidelines with a view to continuously improve decision-making. AREAS TIMELY FOR DEVELOPING RESEARCH: Examine the universality vs. context-dependence of triaging principles and criteria; empirically test the appropriateness of triaging guidelines, including impact on vulnerable groups and risk of discrimination; study the potential and challenges of AI for outcome and preference prediction and decision-support.


Asunto(s)
COVID-19/terapia , Cuidados Críticos/ética , Triaje/ética , COVID-19/epidemiología , COVID-19/transmisión , Protocolos Clínicos , Humanos
8.
Rev. Méd. Clín. Condes ; 32(1): 61-74, ene.-feb. 2021. tab
Artículo en Español | WHO COVID, LILACS (Américas) | ID: covidwho-1244816

RESUMEN

Las pandemias y otras catástrofes de alto impacto sanitario azotan periódicamente a la humanidad, aumentando desproporcionadamente la demanda por atención en servicios de urgencia, unidades de cuidados intensivos y medios de soporte vital avanzado. Este desequilibrio obliga a una compleja toma de decisiones en que se deben asignar recursos proporcionalmente escasos en relación a una gran demanda. Así, los equipos clínicos asistenciales necesitan actuar bajo criterios consensuados, que orienten sus decisiones y alivien la pesada carga moral de seleccionar pacientes para terapias, en detrimento de otros. El triaje es una estrategia que permite establecer, bajo racionalidades propias a cada escenario, objetivos y criterios que faciliten la toma de decisiones complejas para el logro del mejor resultado. Estas estrategias deben considerar el marco de valores intangibles que apreciamos y que nos identifican cultural y socialmente, como son el respeto a la vida, la igualdad, la justicia y la libertad. Sin embargo, en escenarios excepcionales como el de la actual pandemia COVID-19, en que el sistema sanitario puede no dar abasto, deberán establecerse objetivos prioritarios, como salvar la mayor cantidad de vidas, del modo más humano, justo y eficiente posible. A la vez, deberán redefinirse jerarquías en los valores y principios clásicos de la práctica clínica cotidiana, adecuadas a la catástrofe sanitaria, bajo una ética propia de la salud pública, el mayor bien para la mayoría y el mejor cuidado de los que no pueden ser curados.


Pandemics and other global disasters regularly overwhelm humankind. These catastrophic events suddenly increase demand for health-care in emergency services, intensive care units, and for advanced life support devices. This imbalance requires complex decision-making in which scarce resources must be allocated in relation to high demand. Thus, health-care teams need to act under consensus criteria that guide their decisions and alleviate the heavy moral burden of selecting patients for therapies, excluding others. Triage is a strategy that allows to establish, under appropriate rationalities, objectives and criteria that facilitate complex decisions to achieve the best results. These strategies should consider the framework of intangible values that we appreciate and identify us culturally and socially, such as respect for life, equity, justice and freedom. However, in exceptional scenarios such as the current COVID-19 pandemic, where the health system may be overcome, priority goals should focus in order to save as many lives as possible and by mean the most humane, fair and efficient way possible. At the same time, hierarchies of classical values and principles of daily clinical practice should be redefined in an appropriate way to face this catastrophic scenario, under an ethics for public health, the greatest good for the most and the best care of those who cannot be cured.


Asunto(s)
Humanos , Asignación de Recursos para la Atención de Salud/ética , Triaje/ética , COVID-19 , Salud Pública/ética , Triaje/métodos , Pandemias , Escasez de Recursos para la Salud , SARS-CoV-2 , Prioridades en Salud
9.
New Bioeth ; 27(2): 127-132, 2021 Jun.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-1207208

RESUMEN

The current coronavirus pandemic presents the greatest healthcare crisis in living memory. Hospitals across the world have faced unprecedented pressure. In the face of this tidal wave of demand for limited healthcare resources, how are clinicians to identify patients most likely to benefit? Should age or frailty be discriminators? This paper seeks to analyse the current evidence-base, seeking a nuanced approach to pandemic decision-making, such as admission to critical care.


Asunto(s)
COVID-19/epidemiología , Cuidados Críticos/ética , Fragilidad/epidemiología , Asignación de Recursos para la Atención de Salud/ética , Triaje/ética , Factores de Edad , Anciano , Anciano de 80 o más Años , Toma de Decisiones Clínicas , Comorbilidad , Humanos , Persona de Mediana Edad , SARS-CoV-2
10.
Camb Q Healthc Ethics ; 30(2): 390-402, 2021 04.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-1149670

RESUMEN

The coronavirus disease (COVID-19) crisis provoked an organizational ethics dilemma: how to develop ethical pandemic policy while upholding our organizational mission to deliver relationship- and patient-centered care. Tasked with producing a recommendation about whether healthcare workers and essential personnel should receive priority access to limited medical resources during the pandemic, the bioethics department and survey and interview methodologists at our institution implemented a deliberative approach that included the perspectives of healthcare professionals and patient stakeholders in the policy development process. Involving the community more, not less, during a crisis required balancing the need to act quickly to garner stakeholder perspectives, uncertainty about the extent and duration of the pandemic, and disagreement among ethicists about the most ethically supportable way to allocate scarce resources. This article explains the process undertaken to garner stakeholder input as it relates to organizational ethics, recounts the stakeholder perspectives shared and how they informed the triage policy developed, and offers suggestions for how other organizations may integrate stakeholder involvement in ethical decision-making as well as directions for future research and public health work.


Asunto(s)
COVID-19 , Ética Institucional , Personal de Salud , Participación del Paciente , Formulación de Políticas , Asignación de Recursos/ética , Actitud del Personal de Salud , Asignación de Recursos para la Atención de Salud/ética , Humanos , Política Organizacional , Triaje/ética
11.
BMC Med Ethics ; 22(1): 28, 2021 03 22.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-1147083

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: The worsening COVID-19 pandemic in South Africa poses multiple challenges for clinical decision making in the context of already-scarce ICU resources. Data from national government and the last published national audit of ICU resources indicate gross shortages. While the Critical Care Society of Southern Africa (CCSSA) guidelines provide a comprehensive guideline for triage in the face of overwhelmed ICU resources, such decisions present massive ethical and moral dilemmas for triage teams. It is therefore important for the health system to provide clinicians and critical care facilities with as much support and resources as possible in the face of impending pandemic demand. Following a discussion of the ethical considerations and potential challenges in applying the CCSSA guidelines, the authors propose a framework for regional triage committees adapted to the South African context. DISCUSSION: Beyond the national CCSSA guidelines, the clinician has many additional ethical and clinical considerations. No single ethical approach to decision-making is sufficient, instead one which considers multiple contextual factors is necessary. Scores such as the Clinical Frailty Score and Sequential Organ Failure Assessment are of limited use in patients with COVID-19. Furthermore, the clinician is fully justified in withdrawing ICU care based on medical futility decisions and to reallocate this resource to a patient with a better prognosis. However, these decisions bear heavy emotional and moral burden compounded by the volume of clinical work and a fear of litigation. CONCLUSION: We propose the formation of Provincial multi-disciplinary Critical Care Triage Committees to alleviate the emotional, moral and legal burden on individual ICU teams and co-ordinate inter-facility collaboration using an adapted framework. The committee would provide an impartial, broader and ethically-sound viewpoint which has time to consider broader contextual factors such as adjusting rationing criteria according to different levels of pandemic demand and the latest clinical evidence. Their functioning will be strengthened by direct feedback to national level and accountability to a national monitoring committee. The potential applications of these committees are far-reaching and have the potential to enable a more effective COVID-19 health systems response in South Africa.


Asunto(s)
COVID-19 , Cuidados Críticos/ética , Toma de Decisiones/ética , Asignación de Recursos para la Atención de Salud/ética , Unidades de Cuidados Intensivos , Pandemias , Triaje/métodos , Conducta Cooperativa , Emociones , Ética Médica , Recursos en Salud , Humanos , Inutilidad Médica , Pronóstico , SARS-CoV-2 , Sudáfrica , Triaje/ética
12.
HEC Forum ; 33(1-2): 1-6, 2021 Jun.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-1146775

RESUMEN

The essays in this special issue of HEC Forum provide reflections that make explicit the implicit anthropology that our current pandemic has brought but which in the medical ethics literature around COVID-19 has to a great extent ignored. Three of the essays are clearly "journalistic" as a literary genre: one by a hospital chaplain, one by a medical student in her pre-clinical years, and one by a fourth-year medical student who reports her experience as she completed her undergraduate clerkships and applied for positions in graduate medical education. Other essays explore the pandemic from historical, sociological, and economic perspectives, particularly how triage policies have been found to be largely blind to structural healthcare disparities, while simultaneously unable to appropriately address those disparities. Central issues that need to be addressed in triage are not just whether a utilitarian response is the most just response, but what exactly is the greatest good for the greatest number? Together, the essays in this special issue of HEC Forum create a call for a more anthropological approach to understanding health and healthcare. The narrow approach of viewing health as resulting primarily from healthcare will continue to hinder advances and perpetuate disparities. Health outcomes result from a complex interaction of various social, economic, cultural, historical, and political factors. Advancing healthcare requires contextualizing the health of populations amongst these factors. The COVID-19 pandemic has made us keenly aware of how interdependent our health as a society can be.


Asunto(s)
COVID-19/epidemiología , Pandemias/ética , Triaje/ética , Humanos , Política , SARS-CoV-2 , Responsabilidad Social , Valores Sociales
13.
BMC Med ; 18(1): 404, 2020 12 18.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-979471

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: The COVID-19 pandemic has placed sustained demand on health systems globally, and the capacity to provide critical care has been overwhelmed in some jurisdictions. It is unknown which triage criteria for allocation of resources perform best to inform health system decision-making. We sought to summarize and describe existing triage tools and ethical frameworks to aid healthcare decision-making during infectious disease outbreaks. METHODS: We conducted a rapid review of triage criteria and ethical frameworks for the allocation of critical care resources during epidemics and pandemics. We searched Medline, EMBASE, and SCOPUS from inception to November 3, 2020. Full-text screening and data abstraction were conducted independently and in duplicate by three reviewers. Articles were included if they were primary research, an adult critical care setting, and the framework described was related to an infectious disease outbreak. We summarized each triage tool and ethical guidelines or framework including their elements and operating characteristics using descriptive statistics. We assessed the quality of each article with applicable checklists tailored to each study design. RESULTS: From 11,539 unique citations, 697 full-text articles were reviewed and 83 articles were included. Fifty-nine described critical care triage protocols and 25 described ethical frameworks. Of these, four articles described both a protocol and ethical framework. Sixty articles described 52 unique triage criteria (29 algorithm-based, 23 point-based). Few algorithmic- or point-based triage protocols were good predictors of mortality with AUCs ranging from 0.51 (PMEWS) to 0.85 (admitting SOFA > 11). Most published triage protocols included the substantive values of duty to provide care, equity, stewardship and trust, and the procedural value of reason. CONCLUSIONS: This review summarizes available triage protocols and ethical guidelines to provide decision-makers with data to help select and tailor triage tools. Given the uncertainty about how the COVID-19 pandemic will progress and any future pandemics, jurisdictions should prepare by selecting and adapting a triage tool that works best for their circumstances.


Asunto(s)
COVID-19 , Cuidados Críticos , Asignación de Recursos para la Atención de Salud/ética , Asignación de Recursos para la Atención de Salud/métodos , Triaje/métodos , Brotes de Enfermedades , Humanos , SARS-CoV-2 , Triaje/ética
14.
J Med Ethics ; 47(2): 108-112, 2021 02.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-985734

RESUMEN

One prominent view in recent literature on resource allocation is Persad, Emanuel and Wertheimer's complete lives framework for the rationing of lifesaving healthcare interventions (CLF). CLF states that we should prioritise the needs of individuals who have had less opportunity to experience the events that characterise a complete life. Persad et al argue that their system is the product of a successful process of reflective equilibrium-a philosophical methodology whereby theories, principles and considered judgements are balanced with each other and revised until we achieve an acceptable coherence between our various beliefs. Yet I argue that many of the principles and intuitions underpinning CLF conflict with each other, and that Persad et al have failed to achieve an acceptable coherence between them. I focus on three tensions in particular: the conflict between the youngest first principle and Persad et al's investment refinement; the conflict between current medical need and a concern for lifetime equality; and the tension between adopting an objective measure of complete lives and accommodating for differences in life narratives.


Asunto(s)
Toma de Decisiones/ética , Ética Clínica , Asignación de Recursos para la Atención de Salud/ética , Equidad en Salud/ética , Justicia Social , Triaje/ética , Atención a la Salud/ética , Análisis Ético , Prioridades en Salud/ética , Estado de Salud , Humanos , Principios Morales
16.
Bioethics ; 35(4): 356-365, 2021 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-1120413

RESUMEN

Most ethics guidelines for distributing scarce medical resources during the coronavirus pandemic seek to save the most lives and the most life-years. A patient's prognosis is determined using a SOFA or MSOFA score to measure likelihood of survival to discharge, as well as a consideration of relevant comorbidities and their effects on likelihood of survival up to one or five years. Although some guidelines use age as a tiebreaker when two patients' prognoses are identical, others refuse to consider age for fear of discriminating against the elderly. In this paper, I argue that age is directly relevant for maximizing health benefits, so current ethics guidelines are wrongly excluding or deemphasizing life-stage in their triage algorithms. Research on COVID-19 has shown that age is a risk factor in adverse outcomes, independent of comorbidities. And limiting a consideration of life-years to only one or five years past discharge does not maximize health benefits. Therefore, based on their own stated values, triage algorithms for coronavirus patients ought to include life-stage as a primary consideration, along with the SOFA score and comorbidities, rather than excluding it or using it merely as a tiebreaker. This is not discriminatory because patients ought to have equal opportunity to experience life-stages. The equitable enforcement of that right justifies unequal treatment based on age in cases when there is a scarcity of life-saving resources. A consideration of life-stage would thus allow healthcare workers to responsibly steward public resources in order to maximize lives and life-years saved.


Asunto(s)
Factores de Edad , COVID-19 , Asignación de Recursos para la Atención de Salud/ética , Triaje/ética , Teoría Ética , Humanos , Esperanza de Vida , Puntuaciones en la Disfunción de Órganos , Pronóstico , Factores de Riesgo , SARS-CoV-2
18.
J Diabetes Sci Technol ; 15(5): 1005-1009, 2021 09.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-1085175

RESUMEN

The COVID-19 pandemic raised distinct challenges in the field of scarce resource allocation, a long-standing area of inquiry in the field of bioethics. Policymakers and states developed crisis guidelines for ventilator triage that incorporated such factors as immediate prognosis, long-term life expectancy, and current stage of life. Often these depend upon existing risk factors for severe illness, including diabetes. However, these algorithms generally failed to account for the underlying structural biases, including systematic racism and economic disparity, that rendered some patients more vulnerable to these conditions. This paper discusses this unique ethical challenge in resource allocation through the lens of care for patients with severe COVID-19 and diabetes.


Asunto(s)
COVID-19/terapia , Complicaciones de la Diabetes/terapia , Diabetes Mellitus/terapia , Asignación de Recursos , COVID-19/complicaciones , COVID-19/epidemiología , Complicaciones de la Diabetes/economía , Complicaciones de la Diabetes/epidemiología , Diabetes Mellitus/economía , Diabetes Mellitus/epidemiología , Accesibilidad a los Servicios de Salud/economía , Accesibilidad a los Servicios de Salud/ética , Accesibilidad a los Servicios de Salud/normas , Accesibilidad a los Servicios de Salud/estadística & datos numéricos , Disparidades en el Estado de Salud , Disparidades en Atención de Salud/economía , Disparidades en Atención de Salud/ética , Disparidades en Atención de Salud/organización & administración , Disparidades en Atención de Salud/estadística & datos numéricos , Humanos , Pandemias , Racismo/ética , Racismo/estadística & datos numéricos , Asignación de Recursos/economía , Asignación de Recursos/ética , Asignación de Recursos/organización & administración , Asignación de Recursos/estadística & datos numéricos , Triaje/economía , Triaje/ética , Estados Unidos/epidemiología , Ventiladores Mecánicos/economía , Ventiladores Mecánicos/estadística & datos numéricos , Ventiladores Mecánicos/provisión & distribución
19.
HEC Forum ; 33(1-2): 73-90, 2021 Jun.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-1083437

RESUMEN

The Covid-19 pandemic has presented major challenges to society, exposing preexisting ethical weaknesses in the modern social fabric's ability to respond. Distrust in government and a lessened authority of science to determine facts have both been exacerbated by the polarization and disinformation enhanced by social media. These have impaired society's willingness to comply with and persevere with social distancing, which has been the most powerful initial response to mitigate the pandemic. These preexisting weaknesses also threaten the future acceptance of vaccination and contact tracing, two other tools needed to combat epidemics. Medical ethicists might best help in this situation by promoting truth-telling, encouraging the rational adjudication of facts, providing transparent decision-making and advocating the virtue of cooperation to maximize the common good. Those interventions should be aimed at the social level. The same elements of emphasizing cooperation and beneficence also apply to the design of triage protocols for when resources are overwhelmed. A life-stages approach increases beneficence and reduces harms. Triage should be kept as simple and straightforward as reasonably possible to avoid unwieldly application during a pandemic.


Asunto(s)
COVID-19/prevención & control , Eticistas , Pandemias/prevención & control , Distanciamiento Físico , Rol Profesional , Conducta Cooperativa , Toma de Decisiones/ética , Humanos , Asignación de Recursos/ética , SARS-CoV-2 , Triaje/ética , Revelación de la Verdad/ética
20.
Med Decis Making ; 41(4): 393-407, 2021 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-1072866

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: During the COVID-19 pandemic, many intensive care units have been overwhelmed by unprecedented levels of demand. Notwithstanding ethical considerations, the prioritization of patients with better prognoses may support a more effective use of available capacity in maximizing aggregate outcomes. This has prompted various proposed triage criteria, although in none of these has an objective assessment been made in terms of impact on number of lives and life-years saved. DESIGN: An open-source computer simulation model was constructed for approximating the intensive care admission and discharge dynamics under triage. The model was calibrated from observational data for 9505 patient admissions to UK intensive care units. To explore triage efficacy under various conditions, scenario analysis was performed using a range of demand trajectories corresponding to differing nonpharmaceutical interventions. RESULTS: Triaging patients at the point of expressed demand had negligible effect on deaths but reduces life-years lost by up to 8.4% (95% confidence interval: 2.6% to 18.7%). Greater value may be possible through "reverse triage", that is, promptly discharging any patient not meeting the criteria if admission cannot otherwise be guaranteed for one who does. Under such policy, life-years lost can be reduced by 11.7% (2.8% to 25.8%), which represents 23.0% (5.4% to 50.1%) of what is operationally feasible with no limit on capacity and in the absence of improved clinical treatments. CONCLUSIONS: The effect of simple triage is limited by a tradeoff between reduced deaths within intensive care (due to improved outcomes) and increased deaths resulting from declined admission (due to lower throughput given the longer lengths of stay of survivors). Improvements can be found through reverse triage, at the expense of potentially complex ethical considerations.


Asunto(s)
COVID-19/terapia , Cuidados Críticos , Asignación de Recursos para la Atención de Salud , Hospitalización , Unidades de Cuidados Intensivos , Pandemias , Triaje , Adolescente , Adulto , Anciano , Anciano de 80 o más Años , COVID-19/mortalidad , Simulación por Computador , Cuidados Críticos/ética , Ética Clínica , Femenino , Asignación de Recursos para la Atención de Salud/ética , Asignación de Recursos para la Atención de Salud/métodos , Humanos , Unidades de Cuidados Intensivos/ética , Masculino , Persona de Mediana Edad , Pandemias/ética , Pronóstico , SARS-CoV-2 , Triaje/ética , Triaje/métodos , Reino Unido , Adulto Joven
SELECCIÓN DE REFERENCIAS
DETALLE DE LA BÚSQUEDA